Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Latinos are more likely to rely on social media for news, where claims are less likely to be verified. Now, researchers and fact-checkers are trying to close the gap.
  • Immigration is playing a big role in the 2024 election and was featured in Thursday night's presidential debate on CNN. NPR looks at the facts behind the candidates' claims.
  • The lawsuit covered 2.4 million residential subscribers and 48,000 businesses in the United States who paid for the package of out-of-market games from the 2011 through 2022 seasons on DirecTV.
  • From March 3-10, Galpão Gaucho Brazilian Steakhouse will join San Diego’s Restaurant Week, offering dinner and weekend specials. Galpão Gaucho will offer guests the full rodizio experience and a complimentary signature dessert for $66 per person. This includes 17 unlimited cuts of meat, gourmet salad bar with over 45 items, as well as side dishes served tableside. Reservations are required. Please note that when making reservations, to add the special note/request: "Restaurant Week." Dinner and weekend schedule: Monday – Thursday 5-9:30 p.m. Friday 5-10 p.m. Saturday Noon-10 p.m. Sunday Noon-9 p.m. The rodizio menu is inspired by the Gaucho culture and the authentic dining tradition of the Brazilian cowboy – grilled meats and fresh salads. With 17 different cuts of meats, ranging from beef, pork, chicken, lamb, and seafood, there is something for everyone to enjoy. Hearts of palm, artichoke hearts, sweet beets, asparagus, imported cheeses, and cured meats are only some of almost 45 items that our gourmet salad bar offers. Cheese bread appetizer and side dishes like garlic mashed potatoes, caramelized bananas, traditional rice and black beans, served tableside, are a perfect complement to the true Southern Brazilian menu. Located at 789 West Harbor Dr #134, San Diego, CA 92101. To make a reservation, visit GalpaoGauchoUSA.com or call (619) 373-9969. Galpão Gaucho Brazilian Steakhouse on Facebook / Instagram
  • About the exhibition: A colorful mix of symbolic forms, representations of abstract thought, and expressions of shared universal mysteries are at the heart of the work Ving Simpson created for more than twenty years at his home studio in Oceanside. The installation is a nonlinear representation of years of creative artistic endeavors, processes, and materials crafted with primal and soulful qualities. A central focus of the gallery is a recreation of the shelves that lined the artist’s studio, displaying an array of small, emblematic sculptures. The objects and compositions are minimal in form, often consisting of repeating patterns in rows and columns. They are constructed from a variety of traditional and non-traditional materials including silver, bronze, wood, metal, tar paper, found objects, and glazed and unglazed clay bodies. Select paintings will also illustrate the artist’s explorations into his perceptions of reality, primarily a series of large banners in the museum’s Grand Stairwell exploring artistic interpretations of water as liquid, gas, and solid. His first painting on canvas, Dancing Nuns painted in 1994, will also feature prominently as an homage to the complexities of interpersonal relationships and how they may inspire an impulse to expand creative horizons. This is the work of a dedicated artist–a maker of well-crafted art objects inspired by a mix of art history, science, and a personal mythology, woven together in an attempt to understand the subtle and sublime mysteries of reality. Simpson says about his practice, “The human path is one of symbols and abstractions. Lacking the facility to fathom the intricacies and mathematics of modern cosmology, I choose to explore the order of the universe using a few simple tools and my intuition.” Curated by Vallo Riberto. Exhibition celebration: 5-7 p.m. Mar. 30. Related links: Oceanside Museum of Art: website | Instagram | Facebook
  • When American-born students move to Mexico and enroll in local schools, officials say language can be a major barrier.
  • The new legislation would lower the financial penalty for some employers and compel them to correct violations.
  • California's state constitution bans involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime. Several states have, in recent years, approved amendments to their constitutions to remove slavery and involuntary servitude exemptions.
  • A year ago, she packed what she could, helped her mother, who's in a wheelchair, into the car and drove all night to find a haven. In the U.S. to accept an award, she talks about her country's crisis.
  • The Biden administration touts the recent decline in border crossings as a policy win. But one family's story of risking the journey shows why asylum restrictions aren't a long-term solution.
466 of 4,032